José Scheinkman Explained

José Scheinkman
Birth Date:January 11, 1948
Birth Place:Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Institutions:-->
Field:Economics
Alma Mater:Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
University of Rochester
Doctoral Advisor:Lionel McKenzie
Repec Prefix:e
Repec Id:psc26

José Alexandre Scheinkman (born January 11, 1948) is a Brazilian economist, currently the Charles and Lynn Zhang Professor of Economics at Columbia University and the Theodore A. Wells '29 Professor of Economics Emeritus at Princeton University. He spent much of his career at the University of Chicago, where he served as department chair immediately prior to his departure for Princeton.[1] He is best known for his work in mathematical economics (particularly dynamic optimization) and finance, oligopoly theory and the social economics of cities and crime; he also helped spur the development of work at the intersection of economics, finance and physics.[2] Scheinkman also famously pioneered the now-ubiquitous application of academic financial theory to practical risk management of fixed incomes during a leave he took as Vice President in the Financial Strategies Group at Goldman, Sachs & Co. during the late 1980s.

Early life

Scheinkman's parents, Samuel and Sara, were members of Rio de Janeiro's small Jewish community. As leftists, his parents were dissidents during the military government in Brazil from 1964 to 1985. Prior to immigrating to the United States to study for his PhD in Economics at the University of Rochester, he grew up and was educated in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Scheinkman studied for his BA in economics (1969) and MA in Mathematics (1970) at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro and the Instituto de Matemática Pura e Aplicada, also in Rio. During his studies he met his future wife, Michele Zitrin, at an annual summer retreat taken by many Jews in Rio. Together and married at the age of 22, they moved to New York so that he could study for his PhD under Lionel McKenzie at the University of Rochester. Two and a half years into his PhD, eventually granted in 1974, Scheinkman was hired as an assistant professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago, where he spent the next 26 years, with the support of Brock who had moved there.

Career at Chicago

After only four years, Scheinkman was promoted to tenure as an associate professor in 1978 and eventually as a full professor in 1981. While at Chicago, Scheinkman helped build the foundation of mathematical economics at a department often better known for economic intuition than rigorous theory. Scheinkman also participated actively in the interface between economics and physics organized by the Santa Fe Institute and often traveled to visiting positions in France, a country for which he has had a lifetime affection. He served as chair of the Department of Economics from 1995 to 1998. Following his chairmanship, Scheinkman moved to New York City, and Princeton University, in 1999.

Research

Scheinkman is perhaps most closely associated with his classic six page paper from 1979 with L. M. Benveniste "On the Differentiability of the Value Function in Dynamic Models of Economics", which provides conditions on model primitives allowing for the standard differentiable treatment of infinite-horizon dynamic models.[3] At least as influential, however, is his very different work with David Kreps in 1983 showing that "Quantity precommitment and Bertrand competition yield Cournot outcomes" and thus providing the canonical modern foundation of Cournot equilibrium as the result of capacity pre-commitments.[4] Building on his interest in the intersection between economics and physics, he helped draw out and test some of the most salient implication of the theory of social interactions, in a series of papers with his star student Edward Glaeser (among others), for "Growth in Cities" (1992), crime (1996) and "Measuring Trust" (2000). Perhaps one of the best loved of Scheinkman's papers is his work with Kevin Murphy and Sherwin Rosen on "Cattle Cycles" (1994), which provides one of the sharpest applications of natural economic theory to explain cyclical variations.[5]

Since joining the faculty at Princeton, Scheinkman's research has increasingly turned to finance, pursuing two distinct but related trajectories. In a series of joint papers with Lars Hansen and other co-authors he has developed new tools for solving and testing continuous time models of financial time series. Simultaneously, he has studied the causes of behavioral and agency frictions in financial markets and, especially, their consequence for financial bubbles. His most prominent paper in the second category is his joint work with Wei Xiong, "Overconfidence and Speculative Bubbles" (2003) making more realistic and quantitative the insight of Harrison and Kreps (1978) that when short selling is costly the most optimistic individuals price the market and thus a bubble can be created by disagreements between market participant generating an option value to sell to a greater fool.[6]

Scheinkman's recent research has focused increasingly on finance (both applied, in his work on bubbles, and mathematical, in his work with Lars Hansen).[7]

Students

Scheinkman has advised more than 30 graduate students at the University of Chicago and several more at Princeton. He was thesis adviser to prominent economists including Paul Romer, Albert (Pete) Kyle, Edward Glaeser, Alberto Bisin, Adriano Rampini, Giorgio Topa, and Glen Weyl.[8]

Activities outside academia

Outside of his academic work, Scheinkman has collaborated with various financial institutions and hedge funds; he spent a year at Goldman Sachs. He has also been influential in Brazilian economic policy, helping to lead the Agenda Perdida review of Brazilian social policy[9] and writing several columns for the top Brazilian newspaper Folha de S.Paulo.[10] Scheinkman was also the top economic adviser to the (failed) presidential campaign of Ciro Gomes.

He was as a founder and partner of the hedge fund Axiom Investments and was involved in the public affairs of Brazil through writing and consulting.[11] He is a member of the United States National Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the Econometric Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Finance Association.[12]

Honors and awards

He was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and is a Docteur honoris causa from the Université Paris-Dauphine

Family

He is married to the New York psychotherapist Michele Scheinkman and is the father of Andrei Scheinkman.

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: José A. Scheinkman – Charles and Lynn Zhang Professor of Economics | Columbia University.
  2. Web site: National Academy of Sciences. nasonline.org. 2014-02-11.
  3. Benveniste. L. M.. Scheinkman. J. A.. On the Differentiability of the Value Function in Dynamic Models of Economics. Econometrica. 47. 3. 1979. 727. 0012-9682. 10.2307/1910417. 1910417.
  4. Kreps. David M.. Scheinkman. Jose A.. Quantity Precommitment and Bertrand Competition Yield Cournot Outcomes. The Bell Journal of Economics. 14. 2. 1983. 326. 0361-915X. 10.2307/3003636. 3003636 .
  5. 2138619. Cattle Cycles. Journal of Political Economy. 102. 3. 468–492. Rosen. Sherwin. Murphy. Kevin M.. Scheinkman. José A.. 1994. 10.1086/261942. 222450923.
  6. Scheinkman. José A.. Xiong. Wei. Overconfidence and Speculative Bubbles. Journal of Political Economy. 111. 6. 2003. 1183–1220. 0022-3808. 10.1086/378531. 3555237. 221276081.
  7. News: Lahart. Justin. May 16, 2008. Bernanke's Bubble Laboratory. The Wall Street Journal.
  8. Web site: Princeton University - Valedictorian capitalizes on time at Princeton. princeton.edu. 2014-02-11.
  9. Web site: Archived copy . 2011-03-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110723023424/http://www.econ.puc-rio.br/gfranco/Agenda%20Perdida.pdf . 2011-07-23 . dead .
  10. Web site: Jose A. Scheinkman's Folha. princeton.edu. 2014-02-11.
  11. Web site: José A. Scheinkman – Charles and Lynn Zhang Professor of Economics | Columbia University.
  12. Web site: American Finance Association Fellows. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20171201030231/http://www.afajof.org/details/page/3720801/Fellows.html. 2017-12-01. 2017-01-10. www.afajof.org.